practical consequences than
Lamartine's famous '_quand l'heure aura sonne_' invocation to
oppressed nationalities. It is possible, indeed, that I exaggerate to
myself the probable effects of this declaration. Politicians of the
Baldwin stamp, with distinct views and aims, who having struggled to
obtain a Government on British principles, desire to preserve it, are
not, I fear, very numerous in Canada; the great mass move on with very
indefinite purposes, and not much inquiring whither they are going. Of
one thing, however, I am confident; there cannot be any peace,
contentment, progress, or credit in this colony while the idea obtains
that the connection with England is a millstone about its neck which
should be cast off, as soon as it can be conveniently managed. What
man in his senses would invest his money in the public securities of a
country where questions affecting the very foundations on which public
credit rests are in perpetual agitation; or would settle in it at all
if he could find for his foot a more stable resting-place elsewhere? I
may, perhaps, be expressing myself too unreservedly with reference to
opinions emanating from a source which I am no less disposed than
bound to respect. As I have the means, however, of feeling the pulse
of the colonists in this most feverish region, I consider it to be
always my duty to furnish you with as faithful a record as possible of
our diagnostics. And, after all, may I not with all submission ask, Is
not the question at issue a most momentous one? What is it indeed but
this: Is the Queen of England to be the Sovereign of an Empire,
growing, expanding, strengthening itself from age to age, striking its
roots deep into fresh earth and drawing new supplies of vitality from
virgin soils? Or is she to be for all essential purposes of might and
power, Monarch of Great Britain and Ireland merely--her place and that
of her line in the world's history determined by the productiveness of
12,000 square miles of a coal formation, which is being rapidly
exhausted, and the duration of the social and political organization
over which she presides dependent on the annual expatriation, with a
view to its eventual alienization, of the surplus swarms of her born
subjects? If Lord J. Russell, instead of concluding his excellent
speech with a declaration of
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